China Daily (Hong Kong)

Baseball’s invisible people

Despite empty seats around stadiums, fans are apparently still flocking in, Associated Press reports.

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In today’s world of social media, fans often point out perceived inaccuraci­es in attendance figures, perhaps posting a photo on Twitter of vacant seats to back up their beef. What gives?

“I’ve been at places where they announce large crowds on a nice sunny day and the ballpark is half empty. That’s when people question, and I’m OK with somebody asking me that question,” said Lou DePaoli, chief marketing officer for the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Teams insist they’re not trying to sugarcoat a smallertha­n-anticipate­d crowd.

Like most of the other sports leagues, Major League Baseball tracks attendance by the number of tickets sold. MLB uses these figures in revenue sharing calculatio­ns, which help the game’s competitiv­e balance between large and small-market teams.

“Attendance becomes as much as an accounting sheet for us as anything,” MLB spokesman Pat Courtney said. “We use those numbers as much internally as we do externally.”

OK, so they’re not trying to be sneaky, simply seeking consistenc­y.

Lee Igel, an associate professor in the sports business and management department at New York University, doesn’t quite buy this.

“If they announced the true attendance number it’d look like there’s something wrong with the business that people aren’t showing up,” Igel said.

Rewording the line in the box score from “attendance” to “tickets sold” would appease some of the skeptics, perhaps attendance figure for the night, an official sellout, even though 2,000 seats were still available to buy when the game began.

Fans used to have to find a knothole in the outfield wall to watch a sold-out game. Now they can just get out the credit card and go right in.

There’s yet another piece of potential confusion in all of this. From our fictional example, let’s say 37,000 people actually walked through the turnstiles that night. That left 3,000 no-shows among the 40,000 tickets that were in the public’s possession.

Perhaps 2,000 tickets were still for sale on the secondary market through various online brokerages, which bought them originally from the team, and the other 1,000 seats belonged to season-ticket holders who had a kid’s soccer game or a late meeting at work but couldn’t find a neighbor or a relative to use them.

Modern- day distractio­ns can be just as much of a barrier to attendance as disinteres­t in the team, but for hardcore seam heads, that’s hard to fathom.

“Maybe a death in the family or something like that,” said Nancy High, a Kansas City Royals season- ticket holder, when asked at a recent game what would keep her from the ballpark.

“Or maybe a hurricane,” offered Patty Faini, who was at Kauffman Stadium that same night as part of a summer-long trip to visit every major league ballpark.

These days, fans can follow every pitch on a device that fits in a pocket. They can watch just about every game in the comfort of their home, too. So on some nights, a season-ticket holder just might not feel like leaving the air conditioni­ng or risking getting rained on and paying $15 for parking. But is that necessaril­y bad for baseball?

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 ?? MICHAEL DWYER / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The sky above Fenway Park is illuminate­d by the setting sun in the fourth inning of a baseball game between the Boston Red Sox and the Texas Rangers in Boston on Aug 7.
MICHAEL DWYER / ASSOCIATED PRESS The sky above Fenway Park is illuminate­d by the setting sun in the fourth inning of a baseball game between the Boston Red Sox and the Texas Rangers in Boston on Aug 7.

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